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Feb 23, 2017
The history of ORAU
Posted by Karen Hurst in categories: biotech/medical, life extension, quantum physics
For all of my friends working in the fight for the cure for cancer; meet the world’s oldest full blown research institute on cancer. Oak Ridge Associate University (ORAU) was established in 1946 to study the fall out of the A-Bomb — its labs, its workers, and its victims in Japan. Many private citizens living in the surrounding areas of Oak Ridge TN, Los Alamos NM, Hanford WA where the enrichment and testing existed where also (unfortunately) exposed, and as a result ORAU’s research was expanded in the late 40s to including civilians living in these regions.
Fast forward to today, ORAU has one of the world’s most extensive set of records on cancer, cancer fallout, treatments, etc. in the world. I highly encourage many research medical teams and labs who are working to reverse aging, precision medicine, etc. that is also targeting cancer that you may wish to connect with ORAU as they do share insights with other researchers often. I often consider ORAU like the world’s library on cancer, carcinogen, etc. that are tied to cancer.
My own family has been working with the team at ORAU since 1949. Sharing for awareness in hopes that it helps their own efforts in anti-aging, precision medicine, Quantum Biology/ Biosystems, etc.
Feb 23, 2017
Melinda and Bill Gates’s Letter to Warren Buffett Reveals the One Thing Successful People Value Most
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in categories: economics, education, health
Bill and Melinda Gates say “the future will surprise the pessimists.”
They discovered childhood mortality is a symptom of other issues
Children’s deaths are often a result of lack of birth control, gender inequality, and poor women’s health. Melinda wrote, “Virtually all advances in society—nutrition, education, access to contraceptives, gender equity, economic growth—show up as gains in the childhood mortality chart, and every gain in this chart shows up in gains for society.”
Feb 23, 2017
This San Francisco Design Studio Engineered McDonald’s High Tech Shamrock Shake Straw
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: futurism
Milkshakes may be forever changed with a brand new engineered straw that lets you get the perfect mix of all flavors.
Feb 23, 2017
Swedish nuclear physicist just got the world’s first approved birth control app
Posted by Shailesh Prasad in category: biotech/medical
For over a year Elina Berglund nuclear physicist has been fighting authorities and malicious headlines. Now her app will be the first in the world to be approved as a contraceptive.
“It feels incredibly exciting that there is now an approved alternative to conventional pregnancy prevention methods, and that it’s possible to replace medication with technology,” says a more than satisfied Elina Berglund, who founded Natural Cycles together with her husband Raoul Scherwizl.
Feb 23, 2017
Interview: Liz Parrish
Posted by Montie Adkins in categories: biotech/medical, life extension
The latest on Liz Parrish. This is a real reporter in Australia and he does ask her a few hard questions on using white blood cells, showing results, being the only patient and so on.
Jeremy Fernandez speaks to Liz Parrish, the CEO of BioViva — an American biotech developing treatments to slow the ageing process in humans.
Feb 23, 2017
Do Robots Deserve Rights? What if machines become conscious?
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in category: robotics/AI
What shall we do once machines become conscious? Do we need to grant them rights?
Check out Wisecrack and their video: https://goo.gl/oaUbAF
Continue reading “Do Robots Deserve Rights? What if machines become conscious?” »
Feb 23, 2017
The Future of Medicine is Artificial Intelligences And a Virtual World
Posted by Shane Hinshaw in categories: biotech/medical, robotics/AI
Innovations in medical science are gooing to allow for greater technological utility for our surgeries. We will see more robotics and AI assistance.
Feb 23, 2017
A Potential Dark Matter Signature Has Been Seen in The Andromeda Galaxy
Posted by Andreas Matt in categories: cosmology, particle physics
NASA’s Fermi Telescope has looked at the gamma-ray emission of M31, the Andromeda Galaxy, and discovered the largest fraction of this powerful radiation comes from the core of the galaxy, very much like in our own Milky Way. The international team of researchers has considered this signature as potential indirect evidence of dark matter.
Some theoretical models predict gamma-ray emissions when dark matter particles interact with each other. Dark matter doesn’t like interacting at all, it doesn’t form clumps or clouds, so these gamma-ray signals might only happen in dense regions, like at the core of galaxies.
Continue reading “A Potential Dark Matter Signature Has Been Seen in The Andromeda Galaxy” »